Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best players are picking the best academic schools which is why Stanford, Duke etc do so well. The best players are not picking Alabama.
Then why aren't the Ivy's all top ten soccer programs? They are also D1.
The Ivy sport may be D1, but the Ivys do not give out athletic scholarships. Only need-based aid like all other students.
It's not all need based aid, there is "merit" aid available as well --- i.e. leadership scholarships and the like.
You know who was a good leader, the captain of the soccer team...
Anonymous wrote:How many players are on a D3 Roster
Anonymous wrote:At many schools, being a D1 athlete is a full-time job. Coaches will DEMAND to see you at practices, workouts, tactics briefings, fitness, etc without any regard to your academic pressures.
This is a very interesting survey of college athletes about their experiences. You can see the number differences between D1 and D3 and get a better idea from the data what to expect.
https://www.ncaa.org/sites/default/files/GOALS_convention_slidebank_jan2016_public.pdf
(personally, unless a professional or US National team callup is in the cards, I'd choose the best academic / career institution).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best players are picking the best academic schools which is why Stanford, Duke etc do so well. The best players are not picking Alabama.
Which explains Florida State's success...
Agree ... FSU, a bastion of higher learning, yeah right. Right up there with WVU (another top 10 school) and USF (top 20).
Zero Ivy League schools finished in the women's top 20 last year. Of the team's finishing in the top 20 only Stanford, Georgetown, and Duke standout as truly "best academic" schools (and two of those are overrated academically due to the money influence at those private schools). The rest are big state colleges or big private schools that are solid academically, but nothing substantially different than their counterparts. With a few exceptions, the same schools that are good at most athletics are also good at soccer. It's about the money and the importance of the athletic department at those schools.
Anyhow, your kid should short list the schools they WANT to attend based on either a focus on some particular academic subject or wide array of solid educational options in a wide variety of fields. They should also pick based on affordability as most soccer scholarships wont cover the whole deal. Then, IF they are offered something at one or more of those shorts listed schools, eliminate those that aren't, then pick the school. D1 or a lower division, whatever makes sense for them. They will most likely not be doing anything with soccer after college, so which team they end up playing on is less of a concern than which school they pick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best players are picking the best academic schools which is why Stanford, Duke etc do so well. The best players are not picking Alabama.
Which explains Florida State's success...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best players are picking the best academic schools which is why Stanford, Duke etc do so well. The best players are not picking Alabama.
Then why aren't the Ivy's all top ten soccer programs? They are also D1.
The Ivy sport may be D1, but the Ivys do not give out athletic scholarships. Only need-based aid like all other students.
It's not all need based aid, there is "merit" aid available as well --- i.e. leadership scholarships and the like.
You know who was a good leader, the captain of the soccer team...
FWIW, just returned from a campus admission tour at an IVY. Presenter stated unequivocally, "as an Ivy League school we do not offer merit or athletic scholarships, only need-based financial aid".
There is a really interesting College Confidential thread going on on this subject right now: https://talk.collegeconfidential.com/athletic-recruits/2149415-no-secret-athletic-money-ivy-league.html
One thing I never realized is that (according to a couple of knowledgeable posters on that thread) if you are being recruited by more than 1 Ivy, you can get a less generous Ivy to use the same financial aid calculation methodology as a more generous one. I'm not sure exactly how this works, but it could end up with families getting significantly more FA than they would otherwise.
It comes down to how good the player is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best players are picking the best academic schools which is why Stanford, Duke etc do so well. The best players are not picking Alabama.
Then why aren't the Ivy's all top ten soccer programs? They are also D1.
The Ivy sport may be D1, but the Ivys do not give out athletic scholarships. Only need-based aid like all other students.
It's not all need based aid, there is "merit" aid available as well --- i.e. leadership scholarships and the like.
You know who was a good leader, the captain of the soccer team...
FWIW, just returned from a campus admission tour at an IVY. Presenter stated unequivocally, "as an Ivy League school we do not offer merit or athletic scholarships, only need-based financial aid".
There is a really interesting College Confidential thread going on on this subject right now: https://talk.collegeconfidential.com/athletic-recruits/2149415-no-secret-athletic-money-ivy-league.html
One thing I never realized is that (according to a couple of knowledgeable posters on that thread) if you are being recruited by more than 1 Ivy, you can get a less generous Ivy to use the same financial aid calculation methodology as a more generous one. I'm not sure exactly how this works, but it could end up with families getting significantly more FA than they would otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best players are picking the best academic schools which is why Stanford, Duke etc do so well. The best players are not picking Alabama.
Then why aren't the Ivy's all top ten soccer programs? They are also D1.
The Ivy sport may be D1, but the Ivys do not give out athletic scholarships. Only need-based aid like all other students.
It's not all need based aid, there is "merit" aid available as well --- i.e. leadership scholarships and the like.
You know who was a good leader, the captain of the soccer team...
FWIW, just returned from a campus admission tour at an IVY. Presenter stated unequivocally, "as an Ivy League school we do not offer merit or athletic scholarships, only need-based financial aid".
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, I think over a half a dozen of the Harvard men's team have represented the USA or another country at the youth level.
Nearly a dozen of them list some sort of high academic honor, such as a National Merit Scholar or an AP Scholar award.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best players are picking the best academic schools which is why Stanford, Duke etc do so well. The best players are not picking Alabama.
Then why aren't the Ivy's all top ten soccer programs? They are also D1.
The Ivy sport may be D1, but the Ivys do not give out athletic scholarships. Only need-based aid like all other students.
It's not all need based aid, there is "merit" aid available as well --- i.e. leadership scholarships and the like.
You know who was a good leader, the captain of the soccer team...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best players are picking the best academic schools which is why Stanford, Duke etc do so well. The best players are not picking Alabama.
Then why aren't the Ivy's all top ten soccer programs? They are also D1.
The Ivy sport may be D1, but the Ivys do not give out athletic scholarships. Only need-based aid like all other students.
Anonymous wrote:The best players are picking the best academic schools which is why Stanford, Duke etc do so well. The best players are not picking Alabama.